The Narthex
On Not Hearing Back
A modest proposal on the phenomenon of letters sent but unanswered
By James Hanink | April 4th 2023 3:42 PM“Well, did you ever hear back”? You thought you’d ask her, since two weeks ago your spouse “fired off” a letter to a chap whose head isn’t on straight. Or maybe you ask the same of the secretary of a committee (a group graced by your presence). After all, you’d…
READ FULL BLOG POSTBarrier to Discipleship
The rich young man's wealth led him to decline Jesus’ invitation -- Part 2
By James Thunder | March 22nd 2023 1:36 PMIn my previous post I discussed one way Jesus' statement about the rich man may have overwhelmed His audience. There is a second way. Jesus did not say (in Matt. 19:24, Mark 10:25; Luke 18:25) how much property makes one so rich that he is like the camel. We all…
READ FULL BLOG POSTWho Are the Rich Who Are Like Camels? We Are
Jesus did not subscribe to the notion that the rich had been blessed by God -- Part 1
By James Thunder | March 17th 2023 4:35 PMIt is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God (Matt. 19:24). Our Lord delighted His listeners with His rhetoric. These days the word rhetoric is used pejoratively, or derisively, to refer to language lacking…
READ FULL BLOG POSTLent and Guilt
Guilt is the recognition that we have responsibilities and that other people matter
By David Daintree | February 15th 2023 3:28 PMI have a confession to make. For me and for many feeble Catholics like myself Lent nowadays is marked by little more than a cardboard money box on the kitchen windowsill and perhaps an intention to drink a little less wine and give up something nice like chocolate for six…
READ FULL BLOG POSTTwo Rules of Thumb to Avoid Sin
Wise words from a grade-school retreat master are worth passing forward
By James Thunder | November 21st 2022 1:11 PMBefore my class of one hundred graduated from grade school -- from Mary, Seat of Wisdom School in Park Ridge, Illinois, in 1964 -- we had a Day of Recollection at our church conducted by one of the priests who belonged to the Mission Band of the Archdiocese of Chicago.…
READ FULL BLOG POSTTruth and Consequences
Honest dialogue and, indeed, human communication depend on objective truth
By James Hanink | September 26th 2022 2:51 PMI like “Ike,” as I’ll call him. He was a catalyst for the pre-synod “listening session” that my seminary friends of yesteryear recently held. For my part I only “listened in” on the session. Then I offered a critique here, in a blog post. Ike didn’t much like what he…
READ FULL BLOG POSTFirst Ironman of Hawaii - Part 1
Father Damien cleared many tests of human endurance, starting in 1863
By James Thunder | September 22nd 2022 2:22 PMOn October 6 and 8, the Ironman Triathlon will take place in Hawaii. In a contest that tests human endurance, the athletes, without taking breaks, will swim 2.4 miles in the open ocean, bike 112 miles, and run a marathon (26 miles). It has been held annually since 1978. I…
READ FULL BLOG POSTDeafening Alienation
In the social-media vortex, somehow all we're left with is our bared teeth
By Jason Morgan | September 10th 2022 2:18 PMOver the past few years, a number of academic brouhahas has drawn me into checking what professors tweet. Almost all of it is ugly. Within two or three tweets the online exchanges between Professor A and Professor B, or between Professor A and Concerned Citizen B, have devolved into wild…
READ FULL BLOG POSTA Queen Ever Faithful
As a Christian woman, Elizabeth made a promise on her accession to serve her people
By David Daintree | September 9th 2022 11:50 AMFor many people throughout the whole world the Queen's death comes as a profound shock. Not unexpected, of course, after so long a reign, but cataclysmic in its emotional and social impact. Few people in her realms have lived their lives under the reign of any other sovereign. I am…
READ FULL BLOG POSTStarved for Truth
Victims of long-term spiritual starvation are fragile and must be fed gradually
By Richard DellOrfano | September 2nd 2022 2:43 PMWhen Soviet troops arrived at the Auschwitz complex on January 27, 1945, bewildered prisoners greeted them with tears and embraces, kissing the flaps of their overcoats and hugging their knees. Confused and surprised by the wretched conditions of the camp, the soldiers gruffly asked, “What are you all doing here?”…
READ FULL BLOG POSTTwo Pet Peeves
On precise speech and obsession with comfort
By James Hanink | June 22nd 2022 12:42 PMWhat to do about one’s pet peeves? As a peevish person, it’s a question I often face. Maybe I’m too peeved to pursue my current culprits. I have two of them. Consider the now ubiquitous “inappropriate.” Does coach swear a blue streak? That’s inappropriate, says the principal. Do Mike and…
READ FULL BLOG POSTCardinals, Cardinal Virtues, and Clarity
No one acts prudently who violates the commandment 'Thou shall not kill'
By James Hanink | June 1st 2022 3:05 PMThe press is repeating Bishop (and now Cardinal-elect) Robert McElroy’s charge that excluding Catholic politicians from Communion is wrongheaded. “It will bring tremendously destructive consequences” he writes, and politics is to blame. “The Eucharist is being weaponized and deployed as a tool in political warfare.” McElroy also points to the…
READ FULL BLOG POSTThe Mystery of Sacrifice
So many give their lives for justice, love, and truth
By Richard DellOrfano | May 31st 2022 1:29 PMThe need for sacrifice exists in every theater of nature. Life cannot exist and persist without some sacrifice of its components. Stars explode in supernovas to provide gaseous dust and minerals for newborn stars and their offspring in planetary systems. A forest's fallen timbers donate their substance to newly sprouting…
READ FULL BLOG POST'Mediocrity is Excellence'
Archbishop Sheen described one factor now dragging down the West
By Richard DellOrfano | March 1st 2022 3:48 PMI learned in engineering economics that quantity diminishes quality when constrained by limited resources. Manufacturers, farmers, engineers, and artists are subject to that reality. It applies to all human endeavors. Examples of this are found in the produce aisle of your grocery store. Commercially-grown, gas-ripened fruits like apricots are bland…
READ FULL BLOG POSTA Poem Just For You
The artist reminds us that beauty is proprietary solely to God
By Jason Morgan | February 22nd 2022 3:43 PMKinoshita Tatsuya is a poet. He has published several books and has appeared on a cultural program on NHK radio called “Bungei Senpyō,” where amateur poets from throughout Japan send in their verse to be shared and discussed by literary figures. In January of this year, I read about Kinoshita…
READ FULL BLOG POST